Answer: Throughout history, women have been marginalized and impeded in education.
Explanation:
- Women have been marginalized in terms of education in much of human history and have not been allowed to educate. The Church defended this view with the "fact" that women had smaller heads than men, and therefore a brain. The struggle for a better position for women and, thus, the right to education has begun since the time of the French Revolution. In 1848, the first gathering on women's rights was held in the US, Seneca Falls, at which the Declaration of Rights and Feelings was adopted in which women sought the right to dispose of their property, custody of children in divorce, extendeddivorce opportunities, better access to education and employment, and the right to vote. The First World War brought about some changes because women have replaced mainly men in their daily lives. It is only after the Second World War that women in the world are more widely given the right to vote. Still, in the short term, the benefit of the right to vote is not noticeable because social attitudes continue to discriminate against women.
- The reality is that women, especially higher education and science, which is difficult to reach without education, were generally unavailable to women, and only a century ago, they had access to higher education. Girls' schooling in elementary school began in the 1880s; in secondary education around 1900, their entry into universities occurred between the two wars and massed after 1950. Globally, post-WWII women's education has become the subject of international political declarations that are believed to have a positive impact. This was supported by the fact that he was with the United Nations the period from 1976 to 1985 proclaimed the Decade of Women. At the 1990 World Conference on Education for All held in Thailand, women's education was of primary importance to international organizations.
David walker address his pamphlet to the world because, he was drawing a huge audience and he was uniting them for racial equality around the world. If he would have address his pamphlet to the united states,only, he wouldn't have drew a big audience.
Denouement
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Revenge of the Red Shirts</span>
Everyone whose name you know dies, except for Horatio. Talk about "casual slaughters" (5.2.424). After four acts of delay, everybody finally gets some revenge, all in about five minutes. In the not-so-friendly-after-all duel, Laertes manages to wound Hamlet with a poisoned sword, which Hamlet then uses to wound Laertes back. To clean up all the loose ends, Gertrude dies from poisoning and Hamlet kills Claudius.